Where and when you can see another total solar eclipse in the U.S., for the next 100 years

If you’re not going to see the big total solar eclipse on Aug. 21, 2017, it doesn’t mean you can never see another one again. After all, this kind of eclipse happens every 18 months, on average, though they often occur over stretches of empty ocean, or in remote corners of the world.

When will another big eclipse be visible in the United States? Mining the data from NASA, here are all the total solar eclipses touching the U.S. over the next 100 years.

Source data: Xavier Jubier from the Five Millennium Canon of Solar Eclipses / Maps created by Annie Ma for The Oregonian/OregonLive

AP Photo/Haakon Mosvold Larsen, NTB Scanpix

April 8, 2024 -- eclipse path

The United States will see another total solar eclipse in 2024, crossing Texas northeast into the rust belt states, then into upstate New York and New England.

Annie Ma/The Oregonian

March 30, 2033 -- eclipse path

Northwest Alaska will see the phenomenon in 2033, but since it’s happening in early spring, don’t expect a trip there to be easy.

Annie Ma/The Oregonian

August 23, 2044 -- eclipse path

The eclipse will mostly cover northern Canada, but totality will reach Montana and a slice of North Dakota at the end.

Annie Ma/The Oregonian

August 12, 2045 -- eclipse path

The next bicoastal eclipse in the U.S. will go from northern California to Miami, touching Nevada, Utah and Colorado before entering the southeast states.